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Movement Planning

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movement planning

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with movement planning across World Wide.
3 curated items2 Seminars1 ePoster
Updated over 2 years ago
3 items · movement planning
3 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Movement planning as a window into hierarchical motor control

Katja Kornysheva
Centre for Human Brain (CHBH) at the University of Birmingham, UK
Jun 14, 2023

The ability to organise one's body for action without having to think about it is taken for granted, whether it is handwriting, typing on a smartphone or computer keyboard, tying a shoelace or playing the piano. When compromised, e.g. in stroke, neurodegenerative and developmental disorders, the individuals’ study, work and day-to-day living are impacted with high societal costs. Until recently, indirect methods such as invasive recordings in animal models, computer simulations, and behavioural markers during sequence execution have been used to study covert motor sequence planning in humans. In this talk, I will demonstrate how multivariate pattern analyses of non-invasive neurophysiological recordings (MEG/EEG), fMRI, and muscular recordings, combined with a new behavioural paradigm, can help us investigate the structure and dynamics of motor sequence control before and after movement execution. Across paradigms, participants learned to retrieve and produce sequences of finger presses from long-term memory. Our findings suggest that sequence planning involves parallel pre-ordering of serial elements of the upcoming sequence, rather than a preparation of a serial trajectory of activation states. Additionally, we observed that the human neocortex automatically reorganizes the order and timing of well-trained movement sequences retrieved from memory into lower and higher-level representations on a trial-by-trial basis. This echoes behavioural transfer across task contexts and flexibility in the final hundreds of milliseconds before movement execution. These findings strongly support a hierarchical and dynamic model of skilled sequence control across the peri-movement phase, which may have implications for clinical interventions.

SeminarNeuroscience

Controlling the present while planning the future: How the brain learns and produces fast motor sequences

Jorn Diedrichsen
University of Western Ontario, Canada
Sep 13, 2022

Motor sequencing is one of the fundamental components of human motor skill. In this talk I will show evidence that the fast and smooth production of motor sequences relies on the ability to plan upcoming movements while simultaneously controlling the ongoing movement. I will argue that this ability relies heavily on planning-related areas in premotor and parietal cortex.

ePoster

Uncertainty differentially shapes premotor and primary motor activity during movement planning

Bence Bagi, Brian M. Dekleva, Lee E. Miller, Juan A. Gallego

COSYNE 2023